A positioning device includes a supporting structure, a work carrier, at least six length-adjustable struts arranged in strut pairs, each strut being moveably mounted to the supporting structure and to the work carrier and at least one drive configured to adjust a length of at least one of the struts. The struts of each strut pair are disposed parallel to each other and each strut pair has a pivot bearing disposed at a first end of each strut and a second bearing disposed at a second end of each strut.
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1. A positioning device comprising:
a supporting structure;
a work carrier;
at least six length-adjustable struts arranged in strut pairs disposed in a triangle, each strut being moveably mounted to the supporting structure and to the work carrier, wherein the respective struts of at least two of the strut pairs are disposed parallel to each other; and
each strut pair including a common drive configured to synchronously adjust a length of the respective struts, wherein each strut pair includes at least one pivot bearing disposed at a first end of the respective struts and a second bearing disposed at a second end of each strut.
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This application is a U.S. National Phase application under 35 U.S.C. §371 of International Application No. PCT/EP2007/001890, filed on Mar. 6, 2007, which claims priority to German Patent Application No. DE 10 2006 011 823.5, filed on Mar. 13, 2006. The International Application was published in German on Sep. 20, 2007 as WO 2007/104446 under PCT Article 21(2).
The present invention relates to a positioning device having a supporting structure, having a work carrier and having length-adjustable struts which are respectively connected, on one hand, to the supporting structure and, on the other hand, to the work carrier, wherein the struts are movably mounted at the points of connection to the supporting structure and the work carrier, wherein at least some of the struts are adjustable in length and wherein at least some of the struts have a drive for adjusting their length.
From the prior art, different positioning devices of the generic type have become known, which are used in a variety of technical fields. The known positioning devices serve to hold an object in position. Such positioning devices are therefore used, for instance, to position a workpiece relative to a tool such that the workpiece can be worked with the aid of the tool. In the automobile industry, a body part of a vehicle, for instance, is positioned in a work station or similar with the aid of usually a plurality of positioning devices. The thus positioned vehicle body can then be machined by, for example, welding robots.
Thus, U.S. Pat. No. 5,787,758 describes a three-axis positioning device which serves for the positioning of objects such as, for instance, workpieces, tools, sensors, optical surfaces, and so on. The known positioning device has a supporting structure, which is connected by positioning elements to an adjustable machine component. The machine component receives the object and, by the actuation of the positioning elements, can be moved and positioned relative to the supporting structure. However, the machine component is intended to be movable only in the direction of the axes of a Cartesian coordinate system of the machine component, the origin of which is fixedly connected to the machine component. A tilting, pivoting or rotation of the machine component about these axes is intended to be barred. For this purpose, the known positioning device has three struts, which are attached, on the one hand, to the supporting structure and, on the other hand, to the machine component. The struts are here connected to and configured with said parts in such a way that they prevent the machine component from being pivoted about these axes. The struts have two strut portions, which are hinge-connected to each other, so that the length of the strut can be adjusted or altered by this being folded open or shut.
Such positioning devices have the drawback, in particular, that they occupy a lot of space and room. This can lead to problems, particularly if the positioning device is disposed in a production line or similar, since here there is generally little space available between the robots, conveyor belts, structural parts, and so on. Furthermore, the known positioning devices do not have the necessary rigidity to be able to counter the sometimes very high loads. In addition, the assembly of the known positioning devices turns out to be very complex.
An object of the invention is to define a positioning device which is of compact and space-saving construction and has a high rigidity.
This object is achieved by a positioning device having a supporting structure, having a work carrier and having length-adjustable struts. Accordingly, an inventive positioning device of the type stated in the introduction is characterized in that at least six of the struts are arranged in pairs, in that, in a strut pair, the struts are arranged in parallel, in that each strut pair, at a first end of the longitudinal extent of the struts, has a pivot bearing, and in that each strut pair, at a second end of the longitudinal extent of each strut, has a second bearing.
Although forces are absorbed by each strut individually, each pair of struts, viewed as a force couple, can also absorb a torque. The average load of the struts is hereby reduced. Moreover, the parallel arrangement of the struts into strut pairs, complete with special designs of the pivot bearing at one end of the longitudinal extent of the struts, exhibits an advantageous rigidity of the total structure. A further advantage of such an arrangement of struts can be seen in the fact that the positioning device is designed relatively compact in relation to the forces and torques which it can bear.
In an advantageous embodiment of the subject of the application, the struts are precisely six in number.
The positioning device thus has precisely three length-adjustable strut pairs, which, given appropriate spatial arrangement on the supporting structure, convey the forces and torques of a workpiece into the supporting structure in a particularly advantageous manner.
According to the invention, it is also provided that each strut pair has a common drive.
In this way, the positioning device becomes yet more compact in total and the control complexity for controlling the drives is correspondingly less.
It is additionally advantageous if the drive is connected to the respective strut pair by an angle-preserving connection, in particular a belt, a toothed belt, a gear system or gearwheels.
Further advantageous embodiments of the positioning device according to the invention can be derived from the claims.
On the basis of the illustrative embodiments represented in the drawings, the invention, advantageous embodiments and improvements of the invention, as well as the particular advantages thereof, shall be explained and described in greater detail below, wherein:
The struts 12, 14, at a first end of their longitudinal extent, represented at the top in
With the bearing plan, described in greater detail above, for the lower mounting of the struts 12, 14, those degrees of freedom for the mounting as a whole are obtained which are shown in the figure by the arrow directions referenced as X, Y and Z.
For a common and length-synchronous mechanical driving of the strut pairs, three embodiments are possible according to the invention.
Each strut of one of the strut pairs 58, 60, 62 is connected at its upper end, by means respectively of a universal joint 64, to a tool plate 66. The universal joints 64 are Cardan joints and the tool plate 66 is configured in the present example as a disk. When spacing out the universal joints 64 of each strut of a strut pair 58, 60, 62, care should be taken to ensure that the struts can lie parallel to one another. Moreover, the diameter of the tool plate 66 is chosen smaller than the outer diameter of the base plate 54, so that the strut pairs respectively have a specific angle to an imaginary perpendicular on the base plate 54, in any event in a starting position in which the strut pairs have an equal length. This starting position can, however, change accordingly in accordance with the length adjustment facility of the individual struts.
The tool plate 66 has a number of cutouts 68, for example boreholes, through-holes or threaded holes, which allow various tools to be fitted onto this tool plate 66. In simple cases, such a tool is a pin, a locating gripper or some other connecting element to the workpiece.
Based on the first strut pair 58, various structural parts belonging to each of the strut pairs 58, 60, 62 are about to be described in greater detail. The first strut pair 58 here has a first 70 and a second strut 72, which substantially consist of a first 74 and a second cylindrical structural element 76. The second cylindrical structural element 76 is here guided in the first one 74 such that a telescopic lengthening of the structural elements 74, 76 is enabled, the cylindrical structural elements 74, 76 preferably having, reciprocally, a rotational degree of freedom along the common symmetrical axis, for which reason, according to the invention, only tensile and compression forces, but no torques, can be applied to the struts and a deformation of the positioning device is prevented. Usually, the lengthening of the structural elements is effected via a built-in spindle or threaded drive.
A universal joint 64 on each of the struts 70, 72 serves respectively to ensure that the predetermined distance between the struts at the point of connection to the tool plate 66 is non-variable. The universal joint 64 has a cardanic mounting, that is to say the struts 70, 72 are provided in principle with a mounting having two degrees of freedom. At the lower end of the first strut 70 there is disposed a fifth pivot bearing 78 and, correspondingly, at the lower end of the second strut 72, a sixth pivot bearing 80. The distance between the fifth 78 and the sixth pivot bearing 80, related to the bearing shaft centers, corresponds to the distance apart of the upper universal joints 64. The effect of this is that the struts 68, 70 are definitely arranged parallel to each other, as long as they have an equal length. This is a problem relating to a synchronous lengthening or shortening of the struts 68, 70, which shall be described in greater detail later.
The fifth 78 and the sixth pivot bearing 80 are supported by their bearing shafts such that they can be pivoted only perpendicular to a further bearing shaft 82 of a seventh pivot bearing 84. The seventh pivot axis 84 is here situated tangentially to an imaginary circle around a virtual perpendicular to the base plate 54, to be precise, in its center point.
For a common and length-synchronous driving of its length adjustment mechanism, the first strut pair 58 has a common electric drive 86, which in the lower region of the struts 70, 72 is connected by a connecting element 88 to a supporting structure 90. The supporting structure 90 is connected on the bearing shaft 82 in such a way that, when the shaft is rotated, it is jointly pivoted, such that both the connecting element 88 and the electric motor 86 are jointly pivoted in the event of a pivot motion. It is thereby ensured that the relative position of the electric motor 68 to the strut feet of the first strut pair 58 does not change. The details of a possible force transmission or torque transmission from the electric motor 68 to the first strut pair 58 are explained in greater detail later, since, in principle, several options are in this case obtained.
In this figure, it is further represented on an enlarged scale that a mechanical connection exists between a lower subassembly 96 and the second cylindrical structural part 76 or the corresponding structural part of the second strut 72.
The drive power for a fourth strut pair 126 is provided by a drive shaft 128. How the drive shaft 128 itself is driven is not represented in detail, though this can be done pneumatically, hydraulically, electrically or in other ways known to the person skilled in the art. Via a gear system 130, the drive power of the drive shaft 128 is transmitted to the struts of the fourth strut pair 126. In the chosen example, the gear system 130 has a first pinion 132, which is connected to a first connecting shaft 134 and in the drive situation rotates this. The rotation causes a second pinion 136 to be driven, which is disposed on a first strut rod 138. Correspondingly, a third pinion 140, which is disposed on the drive shaft 128, drives a second drive shaft 142, which in turn drives a fourth pinion 144, which is in turn disposed on a second strut rod 146. The strut rods 138, 146 are rotatable about their longitudinal axis and are correspondingly mounted, the mounting pointing in the strut end being supported, in a manner already described above, with a cardanic mounting 148. In order to absorb the bearing forces of a second bearing on the strut rods 138, 146, connecting rods 150 are provided, which connect the drive to said mounting. This is symbolized in the figure by the corresponding connecting rods 150, which connect the corresponding bearing symbols on the drive shaft 128 to the bearing symbols on the strut rods 138, 146. It is also equally conceivable that, instead of such connecting rods 150, a housing absorbs the bearing forces. A torsionally rigid length-compensating mechanism 127 finally allows the strut pair to be jointly pivoted about the rotational axes 26. without impairing the transmission of the drive power.
As is shown by
In this design, it has in fact proved particularly favorable that various technical functions lie respectively in one plane, which functions are indicated in the figure by corresponding squares. A first plane 166 is thus obtained, in which the drive is effected via the drive pulleys 154 and the drive belt 153. A second plane 167 is formed by the strut rods 138, 146 and the corresponding mountings at the two ends of the strut rods 138, 146. A third plane 170 is formed by a tool disk, which in this figure, however, is not shown, while a fourth plane 172 is defined by the rotational axes of the drive pulleys 154. Finally, a fifth plane 174 is also made visible, which lies parallel to the fourth plane 172 and is defined by a bearing point 176, namely a pivot bearing, which lies closest to a supporting foot 178. In this case, the supporting foot 178 of the connecting element is to a base structure (not represented in this figure), to which this embodiment could be connected.
Further measures which contribute to the stability in this arrangement are the use of gearwheels for the force transmission, e.g. including a bevel gear 192, which, as in a 90° bevel gear train, transmits the working drive forces of the further shaft 182 to one of the secondary shafts 184.
Moreover, in this arrangement, a function separation is achieved, in which the torque motor 179 acts upon the shaft 180 and the first brake 188 acts upon the further shaft 182. In this way, a particularly compact arrangement of the individual technical functions is achieved.
A further brake arrangement is shown in
The advantage here lies particularly in the fact that the construction becomes yet more compact and, moreover, the mechanical redundancy of the brake is maintained.
Waldi, Wolfgang, Kock, Soenke, Soetebier, Sven
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Executed on | Assignor | Assignee | Conveyance | Frame | Reel | Doc |
Mar 06 2007 | ABB AG | (assignment on the face of the patent) | / | |||
Sep 11 2008 | KOCK, SOENKE | ABB AG | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 025122 | /0675 | |
Sep 17 2008 | WALDI, WOLFGANG | ABB AG | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 025122 | /0675 | |
Sep 18 2008 | SOETEBIER, SVEN | ABB AG | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 025122 | /0675 |
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